This website collects cookies to deliver better user experience, you agree to the Privacy Policy.
Accept
Sign In
The Texas Reporter
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Texas
  • World
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Books
    • Arts
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Reading: Roblox: The Platform Fueling a Chaotic Music Scene
Share
The Texas ReporterThe Texas Reporter
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Texas
  • World
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Books
    • Arts
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© The Texas Reporter. All Rights Reserved.
The Texas Reporter > Blog > Lifestyle > Roblox: The Platform Fueling a Chaotic Music Scene
Lifestyle

Roblox: The Platform Fueling a Chaotic Music Scene

Editorial Board
Last updated: May 16, 2021 9:08 pm
Editorial Board
Share
Roblox: The Platform Fueling a Chaotic Music Scene
SHARE

Artists, label heads and industry schemers know that success in pop music today requires racking up plays on TikTok and streaming services. But there’s another, unlikely platform that’s picking up steam: Roblox.

Roblox is a game-creation engine, first released in 2006, that allows players to customize their own sandbox worlds, create mini-games on multiplayer servers and enjoy a second life online as square-shaped beings called Robloxians. Unlike Minecraft, a game that drops users into a fantastical “otherworld,” Roblox’s most popular mini-games (or, as Roblox calls them, “experiences”) are rooted in real life. They are “roleplays,” meaning the player performs a certain persona; you can be a sheriff, a parent adopting a child, a pizza chef.

Last year the platform spawned its own music genre — robloxcore. Mostly made by young teenagers, it’s a strain of chaotic, profanity-laden rap that’s overloaded with frantic sound effects. Tunes like “Threat,” by lieu, a 13-year-old musician, emulate being inside a digital dimension where every bass thud and synth shake is an enemy you’re blowing past, every vocal stutter and short-circuited squeak a new obstacle to avoid. The scene has made ripples in the underground music circuit, and earned a nod from Phoebe Bridgers on Twitter.

Music has become such a big part of the Roblox community for one major reason: Starting in late 2013, users became able to upload their own MP3s to the platform, which other players can purchase. Inside worlds, you can equip an item called the “boombox” — a sparkly, golden speaker system — and broadcast the music to players around you. The closer you are to another user, the louder the music is for them.

While the platform’s makers praised how music has become one of its hallmarks — “the fact that Roblox is spawning a new music subgenre speaks to Roblox’s current generational and cultural ubiquity,” wrote Jon Vlassopulos, its global head of music, in an email — in actuality, many of its young users are doing things that are supposed to be forbidden, like hacking illicit music into the game.

Originally, the platform’s founders set a filter for profanity since it’s supposed to be child-friendly. Yet inventive users have devised a workaround. “Bypassing audio” refers to a technique where people distort or disguise an audio file so it slips through the detection systems meant to filter out offensive language and copyrighted tracks. (Methods include layering a song 32 times so the lyrics become deafening and indecipherable, or purposely raising or lowering its pitch so it sounds incoherent to moderators, before readjusting it in the game.)

While many players bypass tame mainstream music that would have otherwise been blocked because of copyright issues, a large contingent of users boost intense, expletive-packed underground rap music. That’s partly how robloxcore exploded, after dozens of players uploaded those types of tracks and trumpeted them with their boombox items, inspiring other users in the same in-game worlds to listen to the music and share it, too.

Lieu, a pioneer of robloxcore and longtime Roblox player whose pronouns are they/their, said whenever they join games, they hear people playing their music. “It’s crazy because none of this was ever my goal, I just wanted to make music and be funny,” lieu wrote over Discord, the talking and texting app popular with gamers. Without the game, lieu said, they doubted the music would ever be popular, “or at least nowhere near as popular as it is now.”

So, who are these mysterious, influential players bypassing music into Roblox?

They call themselves Roblox audio makers. Known for their devious bypassing methods and taste for aggressive rap, they gather mostly on Discord in secret groups and chats run by exclusive collectives. Audio makers sell methods of sneaking songs onto Roblox to one another like furtive weapons dealers; some can go for thousands of Robux, or roughly $20-40.

“The community can be very dangerous at times,” said a Robloxer known as DigitalCrimes, 14, over Discord, explaining that aggravating the wrong person can lead to nasty consequences — having your personal information leaked or worse, players prank-calling a SWAT team to raid your home.

Largely populated by teens and even younger players, the scene has a reputation for trollish behavior. “A lot of them have egos and are edgy and toxic,” explained marty_red, a popular Roblox TikToker, over Discord. “The scene is odd but in a good way — it’s interesting how people can bond over something that goes against the terms of service.”

Bypassed tunes began to circulate in the mid-2010s, around the same time Roblox’s demographics were shifting; the kids who had grown up playing the game in the 2000s were morphing into teens and adults with a taste for restricted content. Suddenly, there was a whole crop of outlaws willfully skirting the Roblox rules to blast blown-out rap music from their boomboxes.

“When I first used to play, there was no distorted rap — the worst you would hear was maybe Eminem’s ‘Rap God,’ and all of it was censored,” said mart_yred, who has been playing for over nine years. “You started to hear bypassed audios in late 2015, and then there was a really big spike in 2017.”

The scene really took off in 2021, when popular audio makers on Roblox like DigitalAngels and CriminalViolence set up shop on the vast video-sharing platform TikTok, establishing an entire subgenre of audio maker-themed videos. Roblox has always had a sizable presence on TikTok — users post gameplay footage, flashy animations and rapid-fire edits — but this content is different. Audio makers rate one another, brag about how much clout they have and compose slide shows of codes you can use to download the freshest bypassed audio in-game.

Over the last few months, the most successful bypass TikTokers have racked up tens of thousands of followers, bringing a group of newbies into the shadowy world of audio making. And some of the tracks they use as audio for TikToks end up flowing out into the broader TikTok pool.

The biggest so far is lungskull’s “Foreign.” The 15-year-old Parisian began as an audio maker bypassing other people’s tracks to the game, but since 2020 has been making his own warped rap songs. After one of his Roblox friends used “Foreign” in a late 2020 TikTok video, the tune had a mini-moment, and has now soundtracked over 45,000 TikTok videos. Eventually, the song leaked beyond the gamer realm, becoming the backdrop to goth girl memes and a video of a cockroach dashing to evade insect repellent.

Other tracks initially lifted by Roblox players that then spilled across the wider TikTok horizon include Axxturel’s ghoulish “Ave Domina Lilith,” which mushroomed in popularity after a Roblox TikToker posted a video of a cluster of male avatars wearing cat ears and maid costumes dancing to the song with the caption “me n the boys.” More recently, the user cybyrbae made a video that helped propel Yameii Online’s “Baby My Phone,” which ended up peaking at No. 2 on the Spotify Viral 50 playlist in March.

While none of these songs fall into a defined genre, they’re linked by their off-kilter vocal styles and a feeling of lo-fi incompleteness — a decaying quality similar to that of bypassed tunes. Many fans call the amorphous sound social reject music, which captures their ironic sense of themselves as the lowest of the low, playfully dissing one another for devouring such low-quality, earsplitting, coarse rap tunes.

“When I wasn’t that known, I thought it was crazy that people would play my music on Roblox — sometimes I would go up to them and say something funny, like, ‘Hey, what song is that?’ as if I was just a random player,” lungskull said over Discord. But ultimately, the game has provided him with something bigger than an audience: “I’ve met so many friends from Discord and the audio community.”

TAGGED:Lifestyle
Share This Article
Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Maya Wiley Lands Major Endorsement From Rep. Hakeem Jeffries Maya Wiley Lands Major Endorsement From Rep. Hakeem Jeffries
Next Article Bill Gates Had Reputation for Questionable Behavior Before Divorce Bill Gates Had Reputation for Questionable Behavior Before Divorce

Editor's Pick

Barbies and Sizzling Wheels will price extra as Trump retains toying with tariffs

Barbies and Sizzling Wheels will price extra as Trump retains toying with tariffs

Appears to be like like President Donald Trump is lastly getting his want: Children will likely be getting fewer dolls…

By Editorial Board 4 Min Read
Alpine’s Sizzling Hatch EV Has a Constructed-In, ‘Gran Turismo’ Model Driving Teacher

One other win over its Renault 5 sibling is a multi-link rear…

3 Min Read
Louis Vuitton Is Dropping a New Perfume As a result of It’s Sizzling | FashionBeans

We independently consider all beneficial services and products. Any services or products…

2 Min Read

Latest

Trump’s tax hike on millionaires is again on the desk—however specialists say it will not make a dent within the ultra-rich

Trump’s tax hike on millionaires is again on the desk—however specialists say it will not make a dent within the ultra-rich

As Republicans in Congress attempt to negotiate a fiscal coverage…

May 11, 2025

De’Longhi’s Latest Tremendous-Automated Espresso Machine Is Most likely Its Finest But

The Rivelia has a nifty little…

May 11, 2025

Flood advisory for Lowndes and Montgomery counties Sunday morning brought on by persistent rain

On Sunday at 4:16 a.m. a…

May 11, 2025

MSG Is (As soon as Once more) Again on the Desk

Making a latest dinner, my spouse…

May 11, 2025

China’s unemployed Gen Z are proudly calling themselves ‘rat folks’ and spending total days in mattress

The millennial period of “work hard,…

May 11, 2025

You Might Also Like

Actual, Messy, and Stunning—18 Books That Replicate the Fullness of Motherhood
Lifestyle

Actual, Messy, and Stunning—18 Books That Replicate the Fullness of Motherhood

We might obtain a portion of gross sales if you buy a product by a hyperlink on this article. Like…

11 Min Read
This Beet, Farro, & Goat Cheese Salad is Peak Spring Taste
Lifestyle

This Beet, Farro, & Goat Cheese Salad is Peak Spring Taste

When spring hits its stride and my fridge begins filling with radishes, herbs, and each shade of inexperienced, I crave…

8 Min Read
This Mango Mojito Is Your New Golden Hour Drink
Lifestyle

This Mango Mojito Is Your New Golden Hour Drink

There are numerous causes I come to life in the summertime. Sunshine, pool days, lakeshore picnics, golden hour snack-dominated dinners—to…

7 Min Read
These 5 Residing Room Necessities Are In Each Effectively-Designed Dwelling
Lifestyle

These 5 Residing Room Necessities Are In Each Effectively-Designed Dwelling

We could obtain a portion of gross sales if you are going to buy a product via a hyperlink on…

7 Min Read
The Texas Reporter

About Us

Welcome to The Texas Reporter, a newspaper based in Houston, Texas that covers a wide range of topics for our readers. At The Texas Reporter, we are dedicated to providing our readers with the latest news and information from around the world, with a focus on issues that are important to the people of Texas.

Company

  • About Us
  • Newsroom Policies & Standards
  • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Careers
  • Media & Community Relations
  • WP Creative Group
  • Accessibility Statement

Contact Us

  • Contact Us
  • Contact Customer Care
  • Advertise
  • Licensing & Syndication
  • Request a Correction
  • Contact the Newsroom
  • Send a News Tip
  • Report a Vulnerability

Term of Use

  • Digital Products Terms of Sale
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Settings
  • Submissions & Discussion Policy
  • RSS Terms of Service
  • Ad Choices

© The Texas Reporter. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?